Temporal endurance of exercise-induced benefits on hippocampus-dependent memory and synaptic plasticity in female mice

Elsevier

Available online 8 July 2022, 107658

Neurobiology of Learning and MemoryHighlights•

Exercise-induced benefits are temporally dynamic in female mice.

Exercise enables learning under subthreshold acquisition conditions.

Exercise facilitates long-lasting enhancement of LTP in the CA1 subfield.

Female estrous cycle affects wheel-running but not OLM performance.

Persistent upregulation of hippocampal Bdnf might not be needed for exercise benefits.

Abstract

Exercise facilitates hippocampal neurogenesis and neuroplasticity that in turn, promotes cognitive function. Our previous studies have demonstrated that in male mice, voluntary exercise enables hippocampus-dependent learning in conditions that are normally subthreshold for long-term memory formation in sedentary animals. Such cognitive enhancement can be maintained long after exercise has ceased and can be re-engaged by a subsequent subthreshold exercise session, suggesting exercise-induced benefits are temporally dynamic. In females, the extent to which the benefits of exercise can be maintained and the mechanisms underlying this maintenance have yet to be defined. Here, we examined the exercise parameters required to initiate and maintain the benefits of exercise in female C57BL/6J mice. Using a subthreshold version of the hippocampus-dependent task called object-location memory (OLM) task, we show that 14d of voluntary exercise enables learning under subthreshold acquisition conditions in female mice. Following the initial exercise, a 7d sedentary delay results in diminished performance, which can be re-facilitated when animals receive 2d of reactivating exercise following the sedentary delay. Assessment of estrous cycle reveals enhanced wheel running activity during the estrus phase relative to the diestrus phase, whereas estrous phase on training or test had no effect on OLM performance. Utilizing the same exercise parameters, we demonstrate that 14d of exercise enhances long-term potentiation (LTP) in the CA1 region of the hippocampus, an effect that persists throughout the sedentary delay and following the reactivating exercise session. Previous studies have proposed exercise-induced BDNF upregulation as the mechanism underlying exercise-mediated benefits on synaptic plasticity and cognition. However, our assessment of hippocampal Bdnf mRNA expression following memory retrieval reveals no difference between exercise conditions and control, suggesting that persistent Bdnf upregulation may not be required for maintenance of exercise-induced benefits. Together, our data indicate that 14d of voluntary exercise can initiate long-lasting benefits on neuroplasticity and cognitive function in female mice, establishing the first evidence on the temporal endurance of exercise-induced benefits in females.

Keywords

Exercise

learning

hippocampus

synaptic plasticity

BDNF

estrous cycle

AbbreviationsOLM

object-location memory

LTP

long-term potentiation

BDNF

brain-derived neurotrophic factor

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© 2022 Published by Elsevier Inc.

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